The digital realm is an avant-garde to the extent that it is driven by perpetual innovation and perpetual destruction. The built-in obsolescence of digital culture, the endless trashing of last year’s model, the spendthrift throwing away of batteries and mobile phones and monitors and mice . . . and all the heavy metals, all the toxins, sent
off to some god-forsaken Chinese recycling village . . . that is the digital avant-garde.

Magnetic Tape as Rebel media

Magnetic tape allowed for music/sound content to be recorded by anyone.
It spurred the creation and distribution of 'amateur' content, that could range from entertainment, trough art, to disruption.
The cassette tape made it even more accessible to distribute content and be able to bypass censorship. It could slip unseen, handed under tables, recorded and copied at home, exchanged in back streets, recopied and distributed again.

Magnetic tape

Magnetic tape is a medium for magnetic recording, made of a thin, magnetizable coating on a long, narrow strip of plastic film. It was developed in Germany in 1928, based on magnetic wire recording. Devices that record and play back audio and video using magnetic tape are tape recorders and video tape recorders respectively. A device that stores computer data on magnetic tape is known as a tape drive.
And currently very interesting to know about LTFS by IBM used in cloud services today

The audio cassette

The compact cassette (aka. cassette tape) was originally developed and released by Philips in 1962 in Hasselt, Belgium as an attempt to develop a new standard in audio storage. This replaced reel-to-reel recorders that were more complex and expensive to use. The cassette tape, allowed anyone to make recordings without the technical skills that were needed for the reel-to-reel.

The cassette tape peaked in popularity by the late 1980s, where the market had drastically dropped in both Europe and North America. This was due to a new technology called compact discs (CDs for short) that became popular in the 1990s. By 2001, cassettes had pretty much dropped out for the race as its market share was less than 5%. The following year, U.S music companies had stopped producing them. Blank cassette tapes are still being made and sold today and after a decade of no music being released by big music companies on cassette tape, there has been a comeback, including names such as Justing Bieber releasing on cassette tape.

“It’s the tangibility of having this collectible format and a way to play music that isn’t just a stream or download,” says techno DJ Phin, who has just released her first EP on cassette as label boss of Theory of Yesterday.
“I find them much more attractive than CDs. Tapes have a lifespan, and unlike digital music, there is decay and death. It’s like a living thing and that appeals to me.” Phin left the bulk of her own 100-strong cassette collection in Turkey, carefully stored at her parents’ home, but bought “20 or 25 really special ones” when she moved to London. “I’m from that generation,” she says. “It’s a nostalgia thing – I like the hiss.”

The walkman and the end of the boombox

From the boombox to the walkman, to the ipod, to the iphone
and now to reissued nostalgia [[1]]